FBI: Surge in hate crimes in 2017 the largest since 9/11
Hate crimes in the United States in 2017 saw the largest increase -- to
more than 7,000 -- since a period immediately after the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, new FBI data said Tuesday.

The 2017 data is the latest uniform crime reporting compilation of
bias-motivated incidents from more than 16,100 U.S. law enforcement
agencies, the FBI said.
The figures noted a double-digit increase in anti-Semitic crimes, the
largest increase over the previous year since anti-Arab and anti-Muslim
attacks spiked after the 2001 attacks.
"I am particularly troubled by the increase in anti-Semitic hate crimes,
which were already the most common religious hate crimes in the United
States," acting U.S. Attorney General Matt Whitaker said in a statement.
"The American people can be assured that this Department has already
taken significant and aggressive actions against these crimes and that
we will vigorously and effectively defend their rights."
The Arab American Institute statement said it was disappointed the
report had some "some glaring omissions," including "three of the most
severe acts of bias-motivated violence committed last year."
One omission from the report was the August 2017 death of Heather Heyer
at a rally in Charlottesville, Va., and another involved the stabbing
deaths of two men in Oregon over an anti-Muslim rant.
"The scourge of hate crime continues to harm communities in cities and
states across the country. The FBI data confirm the reality we all know:
hate is increasing in America," the Arab American Institute statement
said. "The FBI data, in what is missing from it, also demonstrates the
hate crime reporting system we have in place is failing to respond
adequately to hate crime, and thus inform fully the policy remedies we
must make to improve our response to hate."
Tuesday's report noted 7,175 incidents of hate crime, and 8,437 related
offenses motivated by race, ethnicity, ancestry, religion, sexual
orientation, disability, gender and gender identity bias.
All but 69 incidents were single-bias incidents with 8,493 victims, the
report said. An examination of victims by bias type showed offenders
targeted nearly 60 percent of victims because of race, ethnicity or
ancestry bias and nearly 21 percent due to religious bias. Sixteen
percent were attributed to sexual orientation bias and nearly 2 percent
to disability bias. The remaining 69 were multiple-bias hate crimes
involving 335 victims.
"Most hate crime incidents (27.5 percent) occurred in or near
residences/homes," the FBI said. "Seventeen (17.0) percent occurred on
highways/roads/alleys/streets/sidewalks; 10.5 percent occurred at
schools/colleges; 5.8 percent happened at parking/drop lots/garages; and
4.1 percent took place in churches/synagogues/temples/mosques."
The 2017 report comes two weeks after the shooting at a synagogue in
Pittsburgh killed 11 people and injured six, in what some officials have
termed a hate crime.
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